-MONTHLY VHS & DVD REVIEW-
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copyright © 2001 - 2004 VideoVista
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Sure Death Revenge
cast: Makoto Fujita, Sonny Chiba, Hiroaki Murakami, and Kazuko Kato
director: Kinji Fukasaku
131 minutes (14) 1987
widescreen ratio 16:9
Artsmagic Warrior DVD Region 2 retail
RATING:
7/10
reviewed by Richard Bowden
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Sure Death Revenge (aka: Hissatu 4: Urami Harashimasu) is actually the
fourth of five film spin-offs from the Hissatu, or Sure Death, TV series
- which explains some of the confusion for a western viewer. As re-titled and packaged
by Artsmagic - also guilty of a degree of misrepresentation in the case of
Gonza The Spearman - the casual purchaser would be
excused thinking that this was a standalone production, requiring little or no context
outside of familiarity with the chambara, or swordplay genre. Whereas a Japanese audience
would probably come to the picture with a recollection of past sequels, the background
of various characters and an appreciation of the various in-jokes on offer, everyone
else takes a while to find their bearings, and while after viewing it is clear that the
main reason for the title's appearance in the UK market is the name at the top of the
box: Kinji Fukasaku.
Fukasaku's profile in the west has rocketed since the massive success of his last film
Battle Royale
(its sequel was completed to less effect by his son, after the director's death). Royale
capped a long and successful career in which he worked across a variety of genres, including
science fiction, 'jidai-geki' or costume drama, as well as most notably the gangster film,
with a long and well-regarded contribution to yakuza drama. Fukasaku's films often give
the impression of being made quickly, exhibiting little of the coolness and restraint of
classic Japanese cinema (one late exception being his Geisha House) but nevertheless with
a high degree of professional competence and involvement. There's frequently wider social
resonance too, notably in the yakuza saga movies, which together provide an informal
commentary on post war Japanese society.
Sure Death Revenge offers none of these wider implications, although the fracturing
and confusion between various social groups will be familiar to those who have seen some
of the director's other films. There is political plotting at the heart of the film, but
it is hard to find in it any contemporary relevance, save perhaps reflecting a typical
Japanese ambivalence as to their place in the world. Sure Death's society is a uneven
one, with corrupt magistrates, an ill shogun and all the problems brought by weak central
values. It opens with a physical representation of this: a magistrate is pursued and
killed by an outraged briber whose suit has been neglected. These moments of public
turmoil, interrupted by the ironic recollections of Mondo Nakamura (Makoto Fujita) the
film's central character, are amongst the film's best. Fukasaku often shines during
moments of darkly ironic humour of which Sure Death Revenge has its fair share.
One especially cherishes the two coffins - one for the body and a smaller one for the
decapitated head - in which one of the assassin's early victims is contained, or Nakamura's
browbeating at home.
Away from his own hearth, Nakamura is ostensibly a loyal if bumbling samurai. However,
after the magistrate is murdered, he is criticised for failing to save the situation,
given reduced wages, the lord then replaced by the young and handsome Okuda - a man
with a much more sinister agenda. Immediately after the introduction of the new official,
a group of the Shogun's retainers create havoc on horseback in Nakamura's village, during
which an elder is killed saving a child. The samurai soon realises that Okuda has something
to hide, as the magistrate quashes any further investigation. During a meeting of assassins
- at which it becomes apparent that Nakamura is in reality a member of the killer brethren
- a bounty is offered for the death of the murderers. Most decline, save for a mysterious
samurai Bunshichi (Sonny Chiba) who clearly has an agenda of his own. A lot of the narrative
is now taken up with Bunshichi as he mercilessly carries out his job while Nakamura searches
for him with the aid of the assassin's estranged daughter. At the same time, Okuda is
trying to get rid of Nakamura, who is doing some annoying investigating of his own.
Fukasaku's film may be somewhat confusing in execution, but there is no denying the
achievement of the art direction. The film looks excellent, and this despite the fact
that the original images has apparently been cropped down to 1.85:1, giving some scenes
a slightly claustrophobic feel. Artsmagic's anamorphic transfer brings out the sharply
colours (notably so in the case of the flamboyantly dressed, noisome retainers of the
Shogun). Less successful is the music, veering from vaguely Spanish up-tempo music through
more suspenseful elements, odd cribs from Stravinsky and the end credits in which there
plays a forgettable Jap-rock song. At the centre of the film is the professional rivalry
and relationship between Nakamura and Bunshichi. One only wishes that this had been dwelt
upon more, providing an anchor for the rest of events. Mondo's real profession is unknown
to his wife and mother in law (who at one point amusingly upbraids him for returning from
a scene of death without an umbrella) and lives reasonably comfortable, if under their
thumb, also enjoying an un-sated relationship elsewhere. In contrast Bunshichi is more
of a nomad, both geographically and emotionally, constantly rejecting the ministrations
of his adopted daughter. As played by the cult actor Chiba, Bunshichi makes a reasonable
enough impact, but it is Nakamura who emerges as the most rounded individual. Actor Fujita,
who had last appeared in the previous instalment, the obscurely named Sure Death! Brown,
You Bounder! (aka: Hissatsu! Baraun-kan no kaibutsutachi, 1985) creates a
believable human being with few of the amazing skills common to cinematic assassins.
As a film Sure Death Revenge would make more sense if issued at once as part of
a set featuring all the Hissatu films (a treatment helpfully accorded the original
Zatoichi as well as the Babycart series). As it is, apart from Sadanga's
less satisfactory Hissatu! (1984), which also stars Fujita, the series is incomplete
in the UK - though perhaps Warrior still has plans to rectify matters. In the meantime,
fans of the director will no doubt still want to see the present film, although better
examples of what Fukasaku is capable of can be found elsewhere - notably in the highly
recommended yakuza boxset that's around generously including Graveyard Of Honour,
Cops Vs. Thugs, and Japan Organised Crime Boss.
The DVD extras include extensive text-based biographies and filmographies of Kinji Fukasaku,
Hiroaki Murakami, Ippei Hikaru, Kunihiko Mitamura, Makoto Fujita and Sonny Chiba. There's
also 'artwork' - just the covers of other DVD titles in this company's catalogue.
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